Human Resource Management Practices of

Agrani Bank Limited

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WWW.ASSIGNMENTPOINT.COM

1.1 Background of the report

The MBA internship program is a required course for the students who are post graduating from the Human resource management of ASA University Bangladesh. It is a 6 credit hour course with duration of 12 weeks. Students who have completed all the required courses are eligible for this course.

In the internship program, I was attached of my organization named ‘Agrani Bank Ltd.. During this time I learned and focused how my organization works with the help of the internal supervisor. As a result I have decided to make a report on “Human Resource Management Practices of Agrani Bank Ltd.”. Agrami Bank Ltd is the leading nationalized bank in this country. To maintain its leading position in the Bangladesh, Agrani Bank Ltd. is always keen to develop long-term beneficial relationship with trustworthy clients. To achieve this end, they have always upgraded their approaches to achieve profitability.

The report on “Human Resource Management Practices of Agrani Bank Ltd.”. was initiated as part of the Internship Program, which is a MBA Degree requirement of the Faculty of Business, ASA University Bangladesh (ASAUB).

1.2 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY

As a partial fulfillment of the Master’s of Business Administration internship is a requirement at the end of the completion of all the credit courses. The main purpose is to be familiar with the real world situation and practical experience in a business firm. Commercial bank, especially Private Bank is one of the important business sectors in Bangladesh. Agrani Bank Limited is ascheduled commercial bank in the govt. sector, which is focused on the established and emerging markets of Bangladesh. The purpose of this study is to earn a real life practical experience on Banking System.

The study mainly conducted with the following objectives:

·  To understand how important Commercial Banks are in the functioning of a modern economy and financial system

·  To see how the commercial are regulated

·  To be able to read and understand bank financial statements and grasp how banks create and destroy money

·  To see how to generate the credit division along with general banking system.

Analysis Objective

Broad Objective

To analyze the present "HRM PRACTICE" of Agrani Bank Limited.

Specific objective

Ø  To determine the steps involved with HRM.

Ø  To determine the roles of HRM.

Ø  To identify the type of system is in HRM.

Ø  To forecast the effectiveness of HRM.

Hypothesis & Assumptions

Ø  Political situation is more or less stable.

Ø  All staffs are involved with HRM.

Ø  There are certain rules and regulations for HRM.

Ø  There is a great demand for Agrani Bank Limited.

Benefits of the Study

Ø  It will help to find out the "HRM Practice" of Agrani Bank Limited.

Ø  The study will help to develop models & apply them effectively in HRM system.

Ø  The study will help us to identify the type of problems that the companies usually face & it will overcome the problems.

Sources of Data

The sources of data or information are divided into two parts that are; primary and secondary sources.

(I) Primary Data

In the primary source, data are collected directly from interviewing their employees and other related personnel. According to the oral communication to determine the responding factors that are extremely related with "HRM System".

Primary Sources:

·  Officials Records of Agrani Bank Ltd (ABL)

·  Face-to-Face interview with the respective personnel

(II) Secondary Data

In the secondary source, different textbooks and journals relating to the theoretical frame work of the project was accessed to define and to determine "HRM Syatem". Moreover, annual reports, company projects profile, related preserved data, financial statements, internet browse and brochure had been collected from the Agrani Bank Limited.

·  Secondary Sources:

·  Research, brochures, and various publications of Agrani Bank Ltd.

·  Annual report, Official data book, Internet.

Study Period

18,March -17 Jun 2009

1.3 LIMITATIONS:

The objective of this study is to earn real life practical experience in Banking System. It requires long time to acquire to the real experience. Time limitation is the main constrain in this respect. The lack of available of data is another limitation. Maximum of banking activity are practical. . Just reading the manual is not enough. To earn such practical experience, it requires working with those events.

The main limitations are as:

·  Time constrain

·  Banking employees are very busy. Sometimes it seems hard to get their attention

·  Lack ofpublished relevant documents

·  Some information is confidential-not open to public.

·  Lack of website information to reach on any nice ending.

·  Facing hassle also to make communication with employees of the organization.

·  Within this limited period it is a bit tough to track all the facts accurately.

1.4 METHODOLOGY

The study methodology included observation of their work procedure, analysis of their information input forms and their output documents, face-to-face communication with the clients, interviews of relevant ABL officials.

HRM system is indeed a tough job to find out. Because several people are involved with this process and they differ from each other by their perception, experience, interest etc. With this process, there is another part; the part is known as "Management", what is a healthy organization from employee’s point of view.

By preparing this paper we have to find out:

Ø  The steps involved with HRM.

Ø  Biasness towards the HRM.

Ø  Types of System.

Ø  Priority in Management.

Ø  Importance in organization.

All types of related things would be revived this project paper to visualize the current phenomenon.

1.5 Ethics & Social Responsibilities:

An organization cannot move alone. Organization needs people to generate its activities & people needs organization to get some kind of services. Agrani Bank is an organization that is concerned to maximize its profit along with maintaining some kind of social responsibilities. It is fully devoted to fulfill the needs for its customer’s satisfaction as well as it is involved socio-economic development activities.

2.1 HISTORY OF BANKING SYSTEM AT BANGLADESH

The banking system at independence consisted of two branch offices of the former State Bank of Pakistan and seventeen large commercial banks, two of which were controlled by Bangladeshi interests and three by foreigners other than West Pakistanis. There were fourteen smaller commercial banks. Virtually all banking services were concentrated in urban areas. The newly independent government immediately designated the Dhaka branch of the State Bank of Pakistan as the central bank and renamed it the Bangladesh Bank. The bank was responsible for regulating currency, controlling credit and monetary policy, and administering exchange control and the official foreign exchange reserves.

The Bangladesh government initially nationalized the entire domestic banking system and proceeded to reorganize and rename the various banks. Foreign-owned banks were permitted to continue doing business in Bangladesh. The insurance business was also nationalized and became a source of potential investment funds. Cooperative credit systems and postal savings offices handled service to small individual and rural accounts. The new banking system succeeded in establishing reasonably efficient procedures for managing credit and foreign exchange. The primary function of the credit system throughout the 1970s was to finance trade and the public sector, which together absorbed 75 percent of total advances.

The government's encouragement during the late 1970s and early 1980s of agricultural development and private industry brought changes in lending strategies. Managed by the Bangladesh Krishi Bank, a specialized agricultural banking institution, lending to farmers and fishermen dramatically expanded. The number of rural bank branches doubled between 1977 and 1985, to more than 3,330. Denationalization and private industrial growth led the Bangladesh Bank and the World Bank to focus their lending on the emerging private manufacturing sector. Scheduled bank advances to private agriculture, as a percentage of sectoral GDP, rose from 2 percent in FY 1979 to 11 percent in FY 1987, while advances to private manufacturing rose from 13 percent to 53 percent.

The transformation of finance priorities has brought with it problems in administration. No sound project-appraisal system was in place to identify viable borrowers and projects. Lending institutions did not have adequate autonomy to choose borrowers and projects and were often instructed by the political authorities. In addition, the incentive system for the banks stressed disbursements rather than recoveries, and the accounting and debt collection systems were inadequate to deal with the problems of loan recovery. It became more common for borrowers to default on loans than to repay them; the lending system was simply disbursing grant assistance to private individuals who qualified for loans more for political than for economic reasons. The rate of recovery on agricultural loans was only 27 percent in FY 1986, and the rate on industrial loans was even worse. As a result of this poor showing, major donors applied pressure to induce the government and banks to take firmer action to strengthen internal bank management and credit discipline. As a consequence, recovery rates began to improve in 1987. The National Commission on Money, Credit, and Banking recommended broad structural changes in Bangladesh's system of financial intermediation early in 1987, many of which were built into a three-year compensatory financing facility signed by Bangladesh with the IMF in February 1987.

2.2 BankingInBangladesh

WHAT IS A BANK ?

A Bank is known by the functions it discharges. It may be defined only by stating what it performs.

Sir John Paget says, that no person or body, corporate or otherwise, can be a banker who does not (a) take deposit accounts (b) take current accounts, (c) issue and pay cheques and (d) collect cheques, crossed and uncrossed, for his customer.

Section 5 of the Bank Company Act, 1991 defines banking as the Accepting, for the purpose of lending or investment, of depositsof money from the public repayable on demand or otherwise and withdrawal by cheque, draft, order or, otherwise. The Act further provides that a banking company which transacts the business of banking must add the words Bank/Banking/Banker after its name.

What is Scheduled and Non-Scheduled Bank ? :

Banks may be divided into scheduled banks and non-scheduled banks. Banks having paid up capital and reserves of Tk.______and whose names have been enlisted by the Bangladesh Bank in their approved list of banks are called Scheduled Banks. There are at present _____ scheduled banks in Bangladesh:

Commercial Banks:

Nationalised banks: 3

Sonali Bank, Agrani Bank, Janata Bank.

Foreign Banks: 7

ANZ Grindlays Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, American Express Bank, Habib Bank Ltd., State Bank of India, Banque Indosuez, National Bank of Pakistan, ..

b)Development Banks: 4

Bangladesh Shilpa Bank, Bangladesh Krishi Bank, Rajshahi Krishi Unnayan Bank, Bank of Small Industries and Commerce (BD) Ltd.

c)Private Commercial Banks:23

Bangladeshi ownership: 20

. Pubali Bank Ltd., Agrani Bank Ltd., Arab Bangladesh Bank Ltd., United Commercial Bank Ltd., The City Bank Ltd., IFIC Bank Ltd., National Bank Ltd., Eastern Bank Ltd., NCCBL.,., Dhaka Bank Ltd., Premier Bank Ltd., Prime Bank Ltd., Standard Bank Ltd., The Bank One Limited, EXIM Bank Ltd., Trust Bank Ltd., First Security Bank Ltd., The Bank of Asia Ltd.,

Jointly owned by foreigners and Bangladeshis: 3

Islamic Bank (Bangladesh) Ltd., Al-Baraka Bank (Bangladesh) Ltd., Agrani Bank Ltd.,

Besides there are a number of Co-operative banks which may be termed as non-scheduled banks. Other financial institutions:

e)Besides the aforesaid commercial banks and specialized banks we have got two other financialinstitutions which perform in fact development by industries in the country. These are: Bangladesh Shilpa Rin Sangstha (renamed as Development Bank Ltd.), Investment Corporation of Bangladesh(ICB).

2.3 Establishment and status of the Bank:

Agrani Bank Limited has been incorporated as a Public Limited Company on May 17, 2007 vide Joint Stock Companies and Firms’ certificate of incorporation No. E- 66888 (4280)/07. The bank has taken over the business alongside assets, liabilities, rights and obligations of the former Agrani Bank (emerged as a Nationalized ) Commercial Bank in 1972, pursuant to the Bangladesh Bank (Nationalization) order No. 1972 (P.O. No.-26 of 1972) on a going concern basis through a Vendors Agreement signed between the Ministry of Finance, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh on behalf of the former Agrani Bank and the Board of Directors of the Bank on behalf of Agrani Bank Limited on November 15,2007 with retrospective effect from 10 july,2007.

The Bank’s entire shares are held by the Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh and 07 other shareholders nominated by the Government. The Bank has 866 branches as on 31, December, 2007 with no overseas branch. The Bank has, however, two wholly-owned subsidiary companies named Agrani Exchange House (pvt.) Limited in Singapore and Agrani Remittance House SDN, BHD in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

A BRIEF OVERVIEW

Agrani Bank Limited, a leading commercial bank with 867 outlets strategically located in almost all the commercial areas throughout Bangladesh, overseas Exchange Houses and hundreds of overseas Correspondents, came into being in 1972 immediately after the emergence of Bangladesh as an independent state. It started functioning as nationalized commercial bank taking over assets and liabilities of the erst while Habib Bank ltd and commerce Bank ltd. functioning in the East Pakistan.

It has been corporatised on 15th November.2007 and emerged as Agrani Bank Limited (ABL) taking over assets, liabilityand goodwill of Agrani Bank.

Agrani Bank Limited is governed by a Board of Directors consisting of 11(eleven) members headed by a chairman. The Bank is headed by the Managing director & Chief Executive Officer; Managing director is assisted by Deputy Managing Director and General Managers. The bank has 7 Circle offices, 30 Divisions in head office, 52 zonal offices and 867 branches including 10 corporate and 40 AD( authorized dealer) branches. The corporate and AD branches are authorized to deal in Foreign exchange business.
The authorized capital of the Bank is Tk. 800 crore.

2.4

Vision

To become a leading bank of Bangladesh operating at international levels of efficiency, quality and customer service.